Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 5, 1881, Page 6

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6 * IRELAND'S WRONCS As Described by an American Gentloman Who Has Traveled Extensively in That Oountry. Almost Incredible Cruslty Practiced Upon Poor Tenants. No Such a Human Being as a Good Landlord Known in Ireland. A Description of How the Peas- antry are Treated [out asking the leaders to tell them to go home quictly, a company of fifty-two dragoons, armed with sabres, carbines, and revolvers, supported on both sides by companies of regular iu. fantry, came from within the walled inclosure of the barracks, rode and marched into the center of the crowd in the most insolent fashion, and formed in line of battle in the thick- est part of the densethrong. It seemed to me to be DELIBERATELY INTENDED THE PEOPLE, But the people understood it, and not a hiss was heard nor an excuse given for a massacre. But the scowling faces of the people revealed their thoughts clearly enough.” Bid you hear of any landlord out- TO PROVOKE rages!’ “T consider all the evictions as land- lord outrages. In every county I have traveled T have heard tales of the cruelty and oppression of land- lords which seem incredible; that I would not have believed if T had heard THE and T cannot pay it | was one of Lord Lonsdowne’s t defense of the Irish landlords, Treland! Jawes You may rest assured that you are i 1 hy Thomas' y y . One trial ¥ to prove its efficacy. — Capturing a Bear a pars ago, by a team fright and a grizzly bear, and that it ¢ city a good deal of money to the costs. performances in the streets. of rheumatism, She said she enants, | The Englishmen went back in silence, greatly moved, and made no further Lord Lansdowne has recently given notice of his intention to seck to de- feat Gladstone’s scheme to give a few crumbs of justice to the peasantry of Reppath, No Matter What Happens e wafe in e only is augl 1w It will be remembered that a sad and fatal accident occurred at Madison » being |/ 1 at a performing Frenchman vost the settle Other towns resolved that they would not have any more bear There OMAWA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY AUGUST 5 1881 S. P. 1319 Special Correspond icago Tribune them in America; and that T would was no town that was loaded for Dusty, July 10.—T saw in Sack- | not have believed even here, if it had [y o0 "l (00 i de 't lna il i other g s bl | 1 Hoeh for the tapible evidenoos of | Soars: after that accifent, Sy heatios DURLNG THE swarthy gentleman who was making | ruin and poverty that lic scattered | (q 0 "o od hot, and he told the only, | himself unconsciously conspicnons by |over the whole country.” chief ‘of police, Hatch, nover {o allow 3 ) Bt wearing a_soft felt hat —the sacred ““Give mo an illnstration or two.” a man with a ,:.rl-‘,m,i,'m bear to come ites in debilitated frames omblor of our nationality abroad, 1| *‘Well, take Benco Jones, who had | & ¥t it & POrtori Brt s ot A perfect 8pring and Summer could not decide from his looks | been described as a martyr in Eng- Y . whether he was a westerner or a southerner, and so I made his acquain- tance, and found that both guesses were correct; that he was Capt. Bell, of Dixon, IlL, who had been a sharp- shooter in our army, while his father had been a brigadier-general in the southern army. He is a man of edu- cation and intelligence, and I learned | erations. During the last famine the that, like myself, he had been both a | 0ld people j He | DIED OF HARDSHIP AND STARVATION, ournalist and lecturer at home, {lu been in Ireland two months, trav- cling about all the time, mostly on jaunting-cars, in the south and south- west, A He came to Ireland as I came first, and ar all English - deputation confess that they' ume-—hwitl; a very scant supply of ipat! jor the political :{Tbo ll'lylh i leg: upt people, and with i 1 { Uk foang that while the Teah might |t i e b il farm Bioek fo pay have some wrongs, their English|this fine, He had a grow ter and rulers wore probably in no way re- sponsible for them. But, like the rvest of us, the scales have fallen from his wu. “‘What do you think of Irish land- lordism,” I asked, ‘‘and English rule to_live at all told by Mr. One peasant to pay & heav a bonus —to and sister, and died. land, and who has written a book in defense of the landlords. many stories of his cruelty that I wonder how he has ever been allowed I will give you one, Hurley, at Clonakilty. family had occupied a farm near Clonakilty for several gen- Before the surviving son ‘was al. lowed to keep the little farm he had fine—as the Irish call once Jone for the privi- e. Bence Jones, every one th says, did not give a penny towards the relief fund in the time of the fam- ine, or towards the relief of the ten- two little orphan children, a brother think, to support. Theso tender children yielded to the want and hardship of their lot and sickened their sicknoss Durin, 1 heard so hing better than a bear fight, and d he should smile to sce a Cana- dian Frenchman get up a bear dance in that town, as long as he walked the streets, When the new mayor, Smi- ley, took the office, he lad only one order to give the police, and that was to keep an eye out for bears, There was consternation in La Crosse on Tuesday, when a boy came up to the police office and said there was a_man down town with a performing bear, and Hatch spit on his hands and told Pernue Clark to follow him. The bear was hitched to the hind axle of a wagon, and the owner was in ere|a saloon taking a drink. Hatch said he would go in the saloon and capture the man, and told Pernue to bring the bear right up to Pleasant to the taste, The it pl for their proferred RS For the Kidneys, L 1o nothing “WARN LIVER CURE. ands owe their health $1.26 per bottle, We _fel6.tu thst 1y —OF the station. Pernue didn’t exactly like the way the thing was divided u and he suggested that maybe he hns better go in after the man, and let Hatch take the bear, ashe was an old bear hunter, but Hatch said the man was a desperado, and he better surround him. So Hatch went in and in Ireland now?” ““I think injustice,” be replied, ‘‘is a very mild name for it— THR WHOLE THING IS BASED ON CRIME, Bence Jones craftily asked the son how much itcost to support these children. The tenant said £10a year. As soon as the children died Bence Jones raised the rentof the little farm £10 per annum, as he claimed got the unresisting Frenchman, and started off, telling Pernue to hurry up with the bear. Pernue isa man that, if he wanted a bear, had rather hire a man to go after it, but the l'ie of the chief was on him, and he walk- T could not believe that any people would endure such wrongs patiently. Talk about the clamor, the discontent, che impetuosity of the Irish; d—n it, no people on earth could be more sub- CAD! missive under such atrocious tyranny, These people, the real intry, are on the verge of starvation. None of them ever pretend to taste meat, or use their own butter or eggs, or any « other markotable produce that they |to run away.” the lockup to help Hatch hold the caise. Their food is sour milk and| ‘‘Bence Jones' rents were all very | man, He overtook them as they ar- potatoes. Their huts are worse than high?" rived at the calaboose, and Hatch the huts of Hottentots, and their| ‘‘Yes, very high. Mr. Hurley, |asked him why he didn’t bring the clothes—well, they are just a little better than our first parents’, yet these | 00 poor creature are villified, both at|® portion of the profits of shop to pay | name was. He said he never could BANEERS. home and abroad, hecause they dare his rent.” take a bear if he didn’t know its name, even to complain!” ‘a\"hy do the peasants pay such H]u put ;Im a r:bll:)ur coll:;d to cun-dr the U ‘‘How about the lawl 5 i - | renta?” place where the bear had stepped on e e o stan | "“Thoy v nowhere olso in God's | him and by this time Sam Clnpbell | Dusnes tranewcted same satht of aa nor most of it in?” world to go if they are turned out. |and Dave Littlejohn, the other police- | ™) o nte Kopt 1n currency or gold subject to “Well,” replied Capt. Bell, “I've Evictions mean death or starvation. | men, had arrived, oand they all AP Y ouatle ot Hotioe been pretty well through the Counties Men like Hurley keep their farms | went down after the bear. The| certificates of deposit 1ssued payable in three, of Cork, Kerry, Waterford, Limerick, Clare, Tipperary, Galway and Ros- common, and I'only saw one act of violence on the part of the people,—1I | bY only saw the finale of it, so to speak, —and to offset it, I-saw what I cer- tainly regarded as a deliberate effort on the part of the government troops to incite an insurrection, and such a ‘nvvoution would have been sure to lead to the annihilation of the troops in any part of America, Nowhere is life and property held more sacred. I felt as safo among these wild mountains of Western Ire- land as on my own farm near Dixon, Tl Every reported orime or outrage, whether true or bogus, and whatever itw cause, is not only grossly exagger- ated but attributed to political disaf- fection, If a careloss boy shies a peb- ble at a window treason must bo lurk- ing about. If an old woman drops a stone from a window on a policeman the district must be proclaimed! If a drunken brawler gets into a row with a neighbor, in a personal difficulty, the country is overrun with troops, and some land leaguer must marched to prison.” ““What was the act of violence that yu‘ulu"l" ‘I was at Blarney viUuE,‘nur tive Blarney castle. I was walk out from Cork to see the castle, and I ‘was quite near the village when I saw laboring men running fields to the roads, and heard shouts from the direction of the village; and then I saw a man running, or rather ing—as near a run uie ocould get; he seemed tired out, and he was stark naked, with the exception of one stock on his left foot. He was covered with bloodlnt(ilndlrt. dA-Ihl ; ld m:dhl was g, AN ightened to doath s Took of teor” remindsd me of pictures of the dethroned fiends in Milton, He passed in silence. ‘41 went on to the village and found that he was a process-server. He had used his power, they said, in a very ingolent way, and suddenly THE EXASPERATED WOMEN ATTACKED Ii’bn\?v tore his mfrom him, and | 5 uncing the wrongs of the peasantry [yr 1 T ad tharshiomd i e st B o Nobraska Land Agency women, The men took no part; the, mm aloof and shouted lns o W orw: compro- mised with those tenants.” il “‘What about the treops?” ‘A Jand-league meeting was adver- tised to be held at Millstreet, a town of 7,000 inhabitants, about thirty or forty miles (rom‘ndohr.k‘. There had been no outrages in t| district, and there d:n‘. no pretensd that theyro ::l an, ger of an outbreak. Yet the ter’s advice, arbitrarily prohibited the meeting two days ore, or ‘pro- olumo" it, as they call suppressing free speech in Ireland. The country people of course did not hear of the proclamation, and 20,000 or more came in. The streets were packed. ’l'lu‘li;uhn digo x::t ui‘nwnd to hol: t:e weeting, an e e and the i derstood it. ot, without asking the people to disperse, or with- W who told me this sto landlord, tenants?”’ said Capt. Bell, ‘“‘and many of his tenants. them spoke of him as a good landlord, 1 saw a great many cases of hardship and even cl'uultf. ‘What did they mean by Lands- downe being a good landlord{” “I find in Treland, everywhere, that if the landlord simply allows them to live and doesn’t evict them, the ten- ants talk of him as a T have gone through the estates of these men who are called good land- lords, and I have fully made up my mind that there is no such thing as a flud landlord in Ireland. T found ndsdowne's rents vo be very high— out of all pro) Tribune. that by their death the profits of the tenant would be increased to that amount. ‘That's a sam k all the even when they have a business cause thewr ancestors lived on them, and they ho to own them, I suppose. ““LORD LANSDOWNE, IN KERRY,"” is another Irish landlord, like Bence Jones, who has posed as a good Did you see any of his ‘I traveled extenlivel{ .- 0 capacity of the landlords, A SPECIMEN OF THE WRETCHEDNESS OF THE PEOPLE, The Englishmen said of course there was no rent paid for that. lenged them to go up with me. stopped a half feet high, Eln," continued the tain; ‘‘it is the deliberate policy of the Irish landlords to allow the tenant just enough to keep body and soul to- gether, —but to keep him too poor to educate his children, too poor to or- ganize, too poor to fight, and too poor , said that it roducts of his farm and be have nl(vuya pe by-and- in Kerry,” saw o good While some of ood landlord, rtion to the produc- the land, The intel- ligent people I met in Kerry charge him not only with giving nothing to the relief of his tenants during the famine, but with making money out of the government advances,” I omit Capt. Bell's statement cf Lansdowne's methods of turning gov- own from the | ernment advances intended for the tenantry to his own personal advan- tage, as I explained and exposed them inan elaborate series of letters pub- lished last summer in The New York These letters were repub- lished in the Counties Kerry and Mayo, and neither Lansdowne nor his agent Trench dared to deny their ac curacy, although Lord Lausdowne, by trickery worthy of a Tombs lawyoer, undertook to impeach the statements of my first lettor, which related to his infamous father and grandfather, by gntenc;ing that I wrote them about “TIremember,” continued Capt, Bell, “‘when in the mountain distriots be- tween Bantry and Kenmare, I was de- The; denied, with the usual arrogance u}; Englishmen, that such wrongs existed. 1 pointed to a miserable hovel on the mountain side as 1 chal- the car and ascended. The cabin was 80 low that we had to stoop to get in; the door was not over four d ; there was no chimney—only & hole in the thatch; the floor was the earth; there were a few chickens and ducks in the dark cabin—for it had no window; it was wretched beyond my power todescribe. T asked the woman if she paid any rent, Bhe said indeed she did; that she had enriched her little plot of ground by carrying manure up the - | mountain side on her back, but now,’ she said, bursting into tears, ‘I have to leave it, as they've raised the rent ed up to the bear and took hold of the chain and said, ‘“Come along, Mr. Bear.” The bear reached up one claw and took hold of Pernue's clothes about the small of the back and closed his claws and twisted a little and there was about a pound of coat tail and pantaloons cloth and shirt that all came off together ina wad, and with a pale faced Pernue started ugl toward 0] bear, and he said he came up to find out of the Frenchman what the bear’s boys made & good deal of fun of Per- nue's clothes, and Sam said the way to handle a bear was to look him right in the, eye and paralyze him. Pernue said he would let Sam paralyze the bear, but before he got him para- lyzed on more than one side the bear would rip all the clothes off him. Arriying at the wagon, Hatch said he would stand on the wagon tongue, and hold it down, and they could sur- round the bear. The bear was laying in the sand asleep, and they gob all around him, and were just going to pounce on him, when he rose up and the air seemed full of bears. The air scemed fairly fixed. With one paw he grabbed Campbell by the slack of the tronsers, and with the other he claw- ed Littlejohn on the shoulder, and he ripped their clothes scandalous, while Pernue got behind a dry goods box and Hatch held to the wagon tengue. The bear stood up on his hind feet with both paws rull of blue flannel clothing, and the police held a council of war on the wagon tongue. Finally they all got AR P e v hauled it to the lockup, the bear fol- lowing, and they gave the Frenchman his liberty an would take his bear and get of town, and the last they saw of him he was going towards Winona locked arms with the bear, laughing, and the police went to the tailor shop to see if it would cost more to mend their clothes than it would to get a new suit. Now they get together evenings and talk over the bear business, and Hatch asks them why they did not chloroform the bear, and use some judgment, — Buoklin's Arniea Salve, The best salve inthe world for euts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chillblains, corns and all kinds of skin eruptions. This salve is guar- anteed to give perfect satisfaction in every case or money refunded. Price, 206c per box, For sale by Isu & Momanox, Omaha, DAVIS & SNYDER, 1606 Farnham 8t., ... Omaha, Nebraska. 400,000 A0CRKRES Caretully selected land in Eastern Nebraska for malo. Great ins in lmproved farms, and Omaha city property 0. F. DAVIS, WEBSTER SNYDER, Late Land Com'r U.P. R, R Ap-febtt Geo. P. Bemis Rear Estate Acency, 16th and Dodge 8ts., Omaha, Neb This agency does STRIOTLY a brokerage business. Does not aud_therel i Doss not speculate, erefore any bargaing are tnsured to its patrons, instead of belng wobbled uv by the Sam o John G. Jacobs, (Formerly of Gigh & Jacobs,) UNDERTAKER. No. 1417 Farnham 8t., Old Stand of Jacob Gis, We three dollars if he|® OMAHA, BUCCEBSORS TO KOUNTZE BROTHERS.) fative properties. Bitters” with equal confid H. H. WARNER, invigorating to the body hy <icians LIV . lver and Urinary o ER'S SAFE KIDNE' offe fochester, N. Y. United States Depository. NationalBank OMAHA.— Cor. 13th and Farnam Sts. OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN STABLIBHED 1856, Organized s & National Bank August 20, 1843, CAPITAL AND PROFITS OVER - OFPICARS AND DIRRCTORS 3 Humuax Kounrzn, Prosident. Aveustus Koozl H. W, Yares, Vice President. ior. A. J. PorrurtoN, Attorney. Joux A. CRRI1GHTON, commend them ice nsed always ans, and $300 000 DOMESTIGS, Lonsdale, Fruit Hill, and sheeting muslins, RIBBONS ! F. H. Davis, Asst. Cashier. This bank recelves deposits without regard to amounta. Tasues time cortificates bearing Interest. Draws drafts on San Francisco and princi cities of the United States, also London, Dublin, Edinby nent of Europe, man line, Selln passenger ticketa for emigrants by the fn. mavidy _aueldt The Oldest Kstatushed BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASRA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., six and twelve months, bearing Interast, or ou demand without interest, Advances mado to customers on approved socu- rities at markot rates of interest. Buy and sell gold, bills of exchange, govern- ment, state, county and city bonds. Draw sigit drafts on England, Ireland, Scot- land, and all parts of Europe. Sell Enropean passage tickets, COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE, EXGURSION TICKETS =R. BUNTINGS! Another Case Black Buntings, 8 I-2c. MORSE & CO0., Cash Jobbers and Retailers of DI -G OOIDS ! FARNHAM STREET. COMING WEEK OUR GREAT SALE OF PRINTS AND GINGHAMS, other well-known brands of Muslin at 8 1-2¢ a yard. Best quality unbleached muslin, 7 1-2c. Pillow case muslins, 10c. Wide at wholesale prices. Linen sheetings from from $1.00 to $1.50 per yard. Very best prints, fast colors, 5. Very best ginghams, 8 1-2c. BUNTINGS!! Thirty pieces new dress goods, 10c. RIBBONS ! RIBBONS ! 700 PIECES ALL SILK RIBBONS 10 CENTS PER YARD. hand the principal cities of the contit In this lot will be found all desirable colors in ALL SILK GROS GRAIN, SHITN AND GROS GAIN, AND FIRE No Such Ribbon GREAT 12,000 dozen fine Dress Buttons at 10s SILK BROCADED RIBBOLVS, from one to four inces wide. Bargains were ever before Shown BUTTON SAT:HI a card—two and three dozen on a card, allisizes and ever a thousand different designs; worth from from thirty to fifty cents a card. S. P. MORSE & CO. - D.T. MOUNT,| SADDLES AND HARNESS. 1412 Farn. St. Omaha, Neb.. HO) buse, as B. 8 Sold in Omaha by LQK ll‘ll.tndl.l.lfzr OMAHA, . toall, Write cific, #1.00 per package, or six pack. 00, Addross all brders » &arsend for Circular smcieo BLO.OO ROUND TRIP, $19.00 ViatheC.B. &0, B. B, First-class and good through thp felr. New York, Boston and all Eastern po portionately low rates. ints, ut pro On sale ONLY at BBIE BROTHERS' Kailroad Ticket Offiee, SCANTLIN'S Seamless Evaporator AND SOUTHERN" CANE MILL. AT YERY LOW PRICES. Send for Descriptive Price List, 5! THOS. SCANTLIN & SON, EVANSVILLE, IND, To Nervous Sufterers THE GREAT EUEPEM REMEDY, Dr, J. B. Sim_pson‘s Specific MBI XOXINE. It 1s & posttive curo for Spermatorrhea, Semina Weokness, Impotancy, and all diseases resulting Montal Anxiety, Loss Memory, Pains in the Rack or Side, and diseases v [that lead to Cousumption Insanity and y [an earlygrave The Spocific B | Medicine is v wi used | Edward. 111, ‘Melvin i, Agwms 11l Alin ing - tul success. | minor defendants hereln’ are nol 28] Pamphlets | inhabitants of, and have not boen found within te tor them and get full par- | tho said district, and have not voluntarily ap- IMSON MEDICINE 00, Nos. 104 and 106 Main St. Buffalo, N, Y. ©. F. Goodman, J. W, Bell, uggisisevery where, ~ 2R Business (College, THE GREAT WESTERN |} GEO. R. RATHBUN, Principal. Creighton Block, .. NEBRASKA. Bov. 20d&w Also 809 Tenth 5t., Omahal B TIRST CLASS SORGHO MACHINERY with wonder- atory of Music. Twenty Professo Superior Buildis Apparatus. ?:pum- Low, && Orders by Telegraph Solicited apET-ly 1y 188 waw Cornell College. The Classileal, Philosophical, Scientific and Civ- epring Upurses compare favorably with the best colleges in the coun rs and Teachers. ngs, Museum, Labortory avd Fall term opens Sept, 16, b Fof catalogues Or other infermation, address ) was, WAL ¥, KING, D. D, Mt, Vernon, lows, the Preparsto. in the Cousery. AGENT POR VHR CELEBRATED CONCORD HARNESS Two Medals and & Diploma of Honor, with the very highest awaed the judges could bestow woe awarded this harness at the Centennial Exhibis tion. ‘Common, also Ranchmen's and Ladies’ SAI- DLES. We keep the largest stock in the wesh, and invite all who cannot examine to send far prices, apdt LEGAL NOTICE, In the Cireuit Court of the United States, for the the District of Nebraska: At & session of the Circuit Court of the Unibed States, for the District of Nebraska, centinued and held pursuaut to adjournment, at the United States court room i the city of Omaha, en the 15th duy of June, 1881, the Hon, Elmer 8. Bundy being present and presiding in said coust, the follbwing amoug other proceedings wase had and done, to-wit: No. 63 G, Shemnan W, Knevals, complainant, va, Edward Hill, Melyin HiR, Agnes Hill, Alvin Hll, Flora Hill, John Hill, gudrdian of mihor detndants. Ta chancery.’ Order on ahsent defendants, And now, on this 16th day of June &, D. 1851 belng at the May term, A. D. 1881, of the said conrt, It having bean made to_ appess to the sat: isfaction of the sald court, that this is a suit comnenced ta enforce un squitabis laity upon veal property within the sald distuiot, and that Hill, Flora mil, John ', guardian of peared in this sult, on motion of Jumnes M. Wool- worth, Esq., solicitor for the sald complainant, it 1s considered by the court and ordered that the said defendarts above named be and shey are hercby direveed to appear and. plead, answer, or demur to the mm.rh{mnl'l Sifot complaint, on or before the first day of August, 1851, and that in default thereof, an order bé entéred in cause, taking the said bill pro confesso. 1t i further ordered by e _cours that twenty days before the said first day ef A gust, 1881, & ww of thisorder be served upon Edward 1ill, Melvin Mill, Agmes Hill, Alvin Hill, John Hill, guardian ol defendar whereever found, it practicable, and al upon the per: son orf persons in on or charge of the real rty described in complainant’s bill ot Compaint, i any thes be, and that & certifid cepy of this order bepublished tor four consecw- tive weeks ln ¢ O Bee." (Signed) ELMER 8. DUNDY, Judge Tus Unrep Stares or Awmnics, | o DISTRICY OF NEBRASKA. h 1, Wateon B. Sinith, cleek of the Circult court of the United £ates for the district of Nchesks, do hereby ceréify, that the above and foregoing ia a true copy of an order entered wpon the Journal of the proceeding of said couwt, in the ‘cause therein entitled; that 1 have compared the same with bhw original entry of said erder, and it ia & truc ranriph sherotrou, aod of the whole ereol. Witness, my official styuature, and the [SRAL) scal of said’ court, ab Omaha, in said district, s 15th 7h TS0 JAMES M, WOOLWGQRTH o gowit B itor tor Platiotia, Pill, Flors o wal MAX MEYER & BRO, MM* MEYER &* BR[] the Oldest Wholesaleand OB A XA 2 Retail Jewelry House in THE LEADING Omaha. Visitors can here Mus‘c H 0 USE find allnovelties in Silver ‘ IN THE WEST! ‘Ware, Clogks, Rich and & X g eneral Agents for the Stylish Jewelry, the La- | Finest and gg;t Pianosand test, Most Artistic, and |Organs manufactured. Choicest Selections in: prices ara as Low as any Eastern Manufacturer Precious Stones, and all mfi Dealer. descriptions of Fine | Pianos and Organs sold Watches, at as Low Prir for cash or ins ents- at- 3 2 Bettom Prices.. ces as 15 compatible with A SPLENDID stozk of honorable dealers. Call ghfinwa Pia;ossgogna]l?)i? and see our Elegan‘t h?ew °:fid ::l?ir Lo Store, Tower Building, ‘ Also Clough & Waxren, o 1s i T g, Eopiy Rl ham Streots Inot fail to sep us bafmpnr- MAX MEYER & BRO. |chasing. M'DONALD AND HARRISON, AR08 ¥ SEREET, ARE NOW (FFERING FOR ONE MONTH ONLY - DECIDED BARGAINS adiss' Suits, Cloaks, Ulsters, Ciroulars, Etc., AT COST. b s a1 500 Suits, at $6.00; 300 Stylis! its, $10.00; 920 Badsamp 7‘:5 Bl;ék Silk Suits, $17.00. We have several lots of staple goods which will be effored at SEVENTY-FIVE GENTS ON THE DOLLAR. All ladies should avail themselves of this great sale of, BORSETS AND UNDERWEAR, 'LINEN AND MOHAIR ULSTERS, SILK AND LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, LAWN SCITS AND SACQUES, McDONALD & HARRISON, DOUTELE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND P UM E S ] Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, CHIN. LTING, HOSE, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS, PIPE, STEAM MINIDG MACHINERY: ;’.Ecl(mu. AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 20-e0d-tt ' HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS. A. L. STRANG, 206 Farnam St.,, Omaha.

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